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Viewing cable 07TIRANA173, SEVENTH ANNUAL TRAFFICKIG IN PERSONS

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
07TIRANA173 2007-03-02 15:58 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Tirana
VZCZCXRO3679
PP RUEHKW RUEHLN RUEHPOD RUEHVK RUEHYG
DE RUEHTI #0173/01 0611558
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 021558Z MAR 07
FM AMEMBASSY TIRANA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 5441
INFO RUCNEEC/EASTERN EUROPEAN COUNTRIES COLLECTIVE
RUEHTH/AMEMBASSY ATHENS 3103
RUEHBS/AMEMBASSY BRUSSELS 0701
RUEHRO/AMEMBASSY ROME 5498
RUEHVI/AMEMBASSY VIENNA 2850
RUEAWJA/DEPT OF JUSTICE WASHDC
RUEHBS/USEU BRUSSELS
RUEHNO/USMISSION USNATO 3383
RUEHVEN/USMISSION USOSCE 2262
RUEHPS/USOFFICE PRISTINA 3585
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 17 TIRANA 000173 
 
SIPDIS 
QSENQITITE 
SIPDIS 
 
STATE FOR EUR/SCE (EKOTHIEMER)QQ 
E&M. Q095Q8 N/A 
TAGS: KCRM PHUM KQM ELAB CMAE KQRDQ PPEF PREL KJUS
EAID, KDQE, ADQ 
SUBJECT: SEVENTH ANNUAL TRAFFICKIG IN PERSONS 
(TIP) REPORT 
 
REF: 06 STATE 
 
1. (U) Below are Embassy Tirana's responses to the 
Qepartment's questions about trafficking in persons in 
Albania. 
 
SUMMARY 
------- 
 
2. (SBU) Albania is a source country for trafficking in 
person1 but is deemed by various international observer 
groups to no longer be a significant country of transit.  The 
GOA recognizes that it remains a source country. 
Complemented by international pressure, the GOA has shown 
political will to address the issue, but lacks resources to 
adequately implement trafficking-related programs.  Following 
Parliamentary elections in 2005, a new Prime Minister took 
over the government promising to wage war on organized crime 
and corruption. High among his priorities has been the fight 
against trafficking, an effort which he has continued to 
speak about and support since taking office. 
 
3. (SBU) Since taking office, the new government has 
undertaken several initiatives to improve anti-trafficking 
programs. Key GOA developments since the last TIP report 
include: Albanian ratification of the Albanian-Greek 
Cooperative Agreement Against Child Trafficking; the 
establishment of Regional Anti-Trafficking Committees; the 
creation of a nationwide, toll-free helpline; the 
establishment of a Responsible Authority for the 
implementation of the National Referral Mechanism (NRM) and 
the Albanian-Greek Cooperative Agreement; the temporary 
activation of a reception center at Rinas Airport for 
returnees and potential victims of trafficking; an amendment 
to the Criminal Code to include the crime of smuggling of 
human beings across non-Albanian borders; an amendment to the 
Criminal Code penalizing the exploitation of children; and 
steps to equip the Serious Crimes Court with identity 
protection devices for witnesses. The GOA has begun 
implementation of its Integrated Border Management (IBM) 
Strategy and Action Plan, a joint EU/US effort based upon EU 
guidelines. (see Item 9F below) 
 
4. (SBU) Despite a protracted and ultimately unsuccessful 
attempt on the part of the government to remove the 
independent Prosecutor General from office, the cooperation 
among the prosecution, the courts, and the police is fair. In 
2006, the police referred 51 new cases to the General 
Prosecutor's Office, which investigated 65 people on charges 
related to human trafficking.  Forty-three cases were 
referred to the Serious Crimes Court, which tried 62 cases 
and convicted 57 people for human trafficking related 
offenses. 
 
5. (SBU) With the exception of the police directorate in the 
southern city of Gjirokaster, the police continued to 
demonstrate a generally cooperative and understanding 
attitude in working with anti-trafficking NGOs and 
international donors and in dealing with trafficking victims 
(see item 11C below).  However, the high volume of turnover 
within the ASP has substantially increased the already 
pressing need for training police assigned to TIP cases. The 
GOA continued to support the National Victim Referral Center 
(NVRC) for trafficking victims with the assistance of 
international donors. In theory, there are 16 interview and 
reception facilities, refurbished by IOM, at major border 
crossing points across the country and at Rinas International 
Airport. Only the Rinas facility and the facility at 
Kapshtice (on the border with Greece) have approved local 
procedures for their use (see Item 11C below). For the past 
four months, the Rinas facility has been inoperable because 
of lack of computer connectivity. NGOs continued to play a 
critical role in providing services to trafficking victims. 
 
6. (SBU) Albania has made good progress establishing the 
necessary structures and programs to bring the country into 
compliance, but regrettably many of these structures and 
programs are not yet fully operational. For these reasons, 
 
TIRANA 00000173  002 OF 017 
 
 
Albania is not in full compliance with the minimum standards 
of the Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000 (as amended 
by the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 
2003 and 2005) and Post believes Albania should remain as 
Tier II.  END SUMMARY. 
 
7. (U) EMBASSY POINT OF CONTACT: Charles Morrill, Political 
Officer, office phone 355 4 24 72 85, ext. 3115, cell 355 69 
208 8271, fax 355 4 23 22 22. Hours spent interviewing, 
collecting data, and drafting the report: FSN-09, 10 hours; 
FP-03, 60 hours. 
 
8. (SBU) TRAFFICKING OVERVIEW. The answers below are keyed to 
reftel, paragraph 27. 
 
A. Human trafficking remains a problem in Albania.  The GOA 
acknowledges that it is a source country for traffickers and 
that in the last decade thousands of women and children have 
been trafficked for sexual exploitation and forced labor. 
The number of third-country women who transit Albania for 
Western countries has dropped significantly, leading 
government and non-government organizations like the OSCE, 
UNICEF, IOM, Vatra Psycho-Social Center in Vlora, NVRC, 
Tjeter Vizion, and Different and Equal (D&E) to conclude that 
Albania is no longer a significant transit country for 
trafficking victims.  During 2006, IOM interviewed and placed 
at the NVRC seven third-country national victims of 
trafficking; two were returned directly to their country of 
origin.  Trafficking in young children by third parties for 
sexual exploitation occurs, but documented reports are rare. 
The majority of cases of child trafficking, both internally 
and externally, was carried out by Roma parents for either 
forced labor or begging. 
 
Reliable statistics within Albania remain problematic.  Over 
the past year, the National Referral Mechanism (NRM) and the 
&Responsible Authority8 for its administration have been 
established, but are not yet fully functional. At the heart 
of the NRM there is intended to be a case tracking system 
that will follow victims from initial identification, through 
proceedings in the criminal justice system, including witness 
protection, and concluding with ultimate rehabilitation and 
reintegration into society.  A contract has been awarded for 
the programming of the database. A parallel linked database 
for the tracking of alleged perpetrators of trafficking 
crimes through the criminal justice procedure, also required 
in the National Action Plan (NAP), has not yet been to be 
implemented. The lack of these databases significantly limits 
the GOA,s ability to systematically gather accurate or 
convincing data. The responsibility for compilation and 
verification of data lies with the National Coordinator for 
Anti-Trafficking Initiatives who holds the rank of Deputy 
Minister and reports directly to the Minister of Interior. 
The five-person Office of the National Coordinator is 
responsible for organizing, monitoring, and reporting on the 
government's anti-trafficking efforts; some of these 
statistics have been incorporated into this submission. 
 
It remains difficult to accurately quantify the number of 
women and children trafficked from Albania.  In 2006 there 
were no reported cases of any Albanians having traveled 
illegally from Albania to Italy by speedboat (down from 
twelve in 2005, three in 2004, and 3,155 in 2002). (See Item 
11C below for estimates of numbers of victims) 
 
The statistics on repatriated victims reported by the GOA and 
the shelters differ considerably.  According to Vatra, this 
difference may be due to police inexperience in identifying 
victims at points of entry. It has also been suggested that 
the discrepancy may be due to improper or insufficient 
training of interviewers and failure to apply consistently 
the agreed-upon criteria for victim and suspected victim 
identification.  The police counter that shelters double 
count some victims and count as victims some residents that 
might more accurately be considered to be at-risk. Victims 
often do not identify themselves as trafficked persons 
because of stigmatization or for fear of retribution from 
their traffickers, but may present themselves later. 
 
TIRANA 00000173  003 OF 017 
 
 
Furthermore, consensual migrants may at times claim to have 
been forcibly trafficked in hopes of sympathy and potentially 
gaining asylum. Most of them were unable or unwilling to 
return to their former homes and received shelter, 
protection, and medical, social, legal, and other services. 
The centralized case-tracking database, accessible to both 
the police and the shelters, as called for in the NAP, and 
better training would help to mitigate this discrepancy in 
the future. 
 
B. Albania is not considered a destination country and 
documented cases of this are rare.  However, some 
governmental and non-governmental sources agreed that 
internal trafficking of both women and children is on the 
rise. NGOs reported cases in which Albanian women have been 
forced into prostitution in hotels and brothels in Albania, 
either as a holding mechanism before being moved to Western 
Europe or to supply a growing demand for prostitutes in the 
summer months along the southern coast. One NGO suggested a 
linkage between money laundering activities in the 
construction of hotels and their operation as brothels. 
Victims are trafficked into extremely harsh conditions. 
Traffickers typically withhold travel documents, physically 
and sexually abuse victims, and threaten victims' family 
members.  In addition, the GOA and NGOs agree that both the 
awareness and the phenomenon of internal trafficking have 
increased. 
 
As noted, evidence now suggests that few women and children 
from other countries are trafficked through Albania. The 
Ministry of Interior (MOI) indicates that, during 2006, it 
intercepted two trafficked foreign women transiting the 
country.  However, the NVRC housed seven foreign women 
victims and one foreign child victim. 
 
Albanian victims are trafficked primarily to Greece and 
Italy, and to a lesser extent other Western European 
countries such as the United Kingdom, France, Belgium, 
Norway, Germany, and the Netherlands. Since trafficking by 
speedboat across the Adriatic to Italy for the purpose of 
forced prostitution was virtually shut down in 2002, Greece, 
Kosovo, Macedonia, and Montenegro have become the main 
countries through which traffickers and their victims pass. 
In January, GOA took further action to curb the use of 
speedboats by traffickers with approval of a three-year 
moratorium on all speedboats more than two miles off the 
coast. 
 
Traffickers typically target poorly educated women and girls 
in economically depressed areas and those living in families 
with serious problems. Victims frequently come from rural 
areas or are recent arrivals to the city; many have 
previously been subjected to domestic violence, rape, and/or 
incest. The majority of children victims of trafficking come 
from Roma and Balkan Egyptian communities, both of which are 
spread throughout Albania.  Two NGO-run shelters, Different 
and Equal (D&E) and the Vatra Center, reported that 10-20 
percent of the victims know they will be prostitutes, some 
plan to escape once they reach Western Europe, but never 
imagine the abuse and servitude that await them. Two-thirds 
of the victims are deceived with false marriage proposals -- 
the leading method of deception -- or false job offers. 
Traffickers often use phony documents (e.g. fake marriage 
certificates, falsified passports) to avoid police detection. 
 A smaller number of victims are simply sold by their 
families.  Kidnappings off the street are very rare, but have 
occurred.  Most children trafficked into Greece are taken 
across illegal border crossings through the mountains.  In 
some cases, adult victims are lured by an emigrant male in 
his early 20s who offers marriage, or by an older relative of 
either sex who offers to connect the victim to someone who 
can give her a better life.  Most of the girls have a very 
low educational background or are illiterate, especially 
those from the Roma community. 
 
The GOA has repeatedly and publicly acknowledged the 
country's trafficking problem and has taken considerable 
action over the past year to address this issue. The Prime 
 
TIRANA 00000173  004 OF 017 
 
 
Minister has made the fight against organized crime and 
corruption the hallmark of his administration and has 
repeatedly characterized trafficking as a festering wound 
that he intends to heal. One of the new government's first 
actions was a major reorganization of trafficking 
responsibilities and the appointment of a full time National 
Coordinator, at the Deputy Minister of the Interior level, 
who heads up a five-member Anti-Trafficking Unit. 
 
C. As one of the poorest countries in Europe, Albania faces a 
number of limitations in addressing the problem of human 
trafficking.  While the GOA has taken steps to combat 
corruption, the problem remains endemic.  Police salaries of 
approximately USD 250 to 500 per month increase 
susceptibility to corruption.  The Office of Internal Control 
(OIC), a division of the Albanian State Police (ASP), 
investigated 98 cases of alleged corruption or other forms of 
official misconduct among the police forces.  (See Item 10M 
below). 
 
The ASP and its Anti-Trafficking Sector remain under-equipped 
and poorly trained, despite donations and assistance from the 
international community.  High turnover and internal transfer 
of police forces exacerbates this problem. In general, police 
support for anti-trafficking measures is satisfactory, 
especially among those officers in the anti-trafficking 
police units at the local level.  During the reporting period 
there were no cases of direct individual police involvement 
in trafficking.  However, some police officers, customs 
officials, and border police were indirectly involved in 
human trafficking by accepting bribes from traffickers to 
look the other way, tipping off traffickers when raids were 
planned, and furnishing them with improper travel documents 
(see Item 10M for specific cases).  Lawyers and judges may 
also be manipulated and bribed, permitting traffickers to buy 
their way out of punishment if arrested. 
 
D. The nine government agencies addressing human trafficking 
are represented on the Inter-Ministerial Committee for the 
Fight Against Human Trafficking.  The Committee, chaired by 
the Minister of Interior, is composed of the National 
Coordinator, deputy ministers and other representatives from 
the ministries of Foreign Affairs, Justice, Finance, 
Interior, Education, Defense, and Labor and Social Affairs, 
and the State Intelligence Service. The General Prosecutor's 
office attends as an observer.  The Committee meets 
approximately every three months to exchange information and 
review implementation of the National Strategy and NAP, and a 
"Focal Point" group of senior representatives from the same 
institutions meets on a more frequent basis.  The Office of 
the National Coordinator is responsible for compiling regular 
assessments and reports, as required by the NAP.  For this 
year's report, the government made available to Post a 
document summarizing developments in the past year and goals 
and objectives for the coming year. The GOA also provided 
statistics on trafficking prosecutions and convictions in 
2006, and data on identifications and referrals of returnee 
victims, shelter and victim/witness protection. 
 
9. (SBU) PREVENTION: The answers below are keyed to reftel, 
paragraph 28. 
 
A. Yes, the GOA acknowledges that trafficking is a problem. 
(See item 8 A&B above). 
 
B.  The National Coordinator has overall responsibility for 
anti-trafficking policy coordination, drawing on the 
expertise of the agencies represented on the 
Inter-Ministerial Committee for the Fight Against Human 
Trafficking (See item 8D above).  The Ministry of Interior 
(MOI) and the General Prosecutor's Office confront the issue 
from the law enforcement angle.  The Ministry of Justice 
drafts legislation in cooperation with the International 
Consortium's Legal Reform Working Group.  The Ministry of 
Labor, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities (MLSAEO) 
oversees operations at the GOA's NVRC for victims of 
trafficking, and MOI provides security.  The Ministry of 
Education has incorporated prevention activities into school 
 
TIRANA 00000173  005 OF 017 
 
 
curricula.  In addition, the Directorate for Equal 
Opportunity at the MLSAEO guarantees equal rights for men and 
women, promotes equal opportunities in order to eliminate 
direct and indirect discrimination, and defines 
responsibilities for drafting of governmental policies 
promoting gender equality. 
 
C. In coordination with the launch of an anti-trafficking 
helpline in October, the GOA, with support from IOM and the 
United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), carried out 
a limited campaign both to publicize the number and to raise 
awareness among potential victims. In addition to providing 
an anonymous means for victims or potential victims to 
denounce traffickers, the helpline also provides information 
about safe and legal means of emigration. The 
Anti-Trafficking Unit reported that in its first two months 
of operation it received 11 substantive calls pertaining to 
trafficking. This information has been channeled for further 
investigation to the Directorate for the Fight against 
Organized Crime and Witness Protection. In addition to a 
televised press conference on the day of the launch, there 
has been an effort to disseminate and publicize the helpline 
further through TV spots funded by the UNODC featuring the 
National Coordinator. 
 
Also with IOM, the GOA prepared and disseminated in 2006 a 
&Safe Migration8 pamphlet that extols the dangers of 
falling prey to traffickers while seeking to emigrate. This 
pamphlet has been distributed to hotels, travel agencies, 
border crossing points, and social service agencies. 
 
D. To promote women's participation in economic 
decision-making, MOLSAEO, with a grant from the International 
Labor Organization (ILO), has begun the implementation of the 
second phase of the regional women's economic empowerment 
project. Through this project, female victims of trafficking 
may apply for micro-loans to start small business as way to 
foster their reintegration by providing alternative 
employment opportunities. 
 
In 2006, the Ministry of Education and Science continued to 
implement a project initiated in 2004 designed to give 
students that abandoned school a second chance. Victims of 
trafficking are one of the main beneficiaries of this 
program. In 2006, 469 students that had previously dropped 
out of school benefited from a special curriculum designed to 
help them earn a high school diploma while attending school 
part-time. 
 
With a grant from the U.S. Department of Labor, ILO and the 
Ministry of Education implemented a $3.5 million regional 
anti-trafficking program.  This program seeks to raise 
awareness among 10-14 year old potential victims of 
trafficking by providing training and materials for teachers 
throughout Albania. This program complements a UNICEF program 
that operates in schools in all regions of Albania and 
targets 6-10 year olds. 
 
E. In 2006, the GOA continued good cooperation with NGOs and 
international donors by both participating in and publicly 
supporting their activities and by involving them in the 
various working groups on trafficking and on child 
trafficking. (See also item 11I below). The Coordinated 
Action Against Human Trafficking (CAAHT) is a USAID-funded 
project to promote coordination among and between the GOA and 
NGO partners. Beyond awarding and managing 23 grants to local 
and international NGOs, CAAHT has worked closely with the 
National Coordinator for the establishment of the Regional 
Anti-Trafficking Committees and is providing technical 
support for their on-going operation. Despite the success in 
getting these Committees up and running, CAAHT has voiced 
concern that NGOs are invited only to observe the committee 
proceeding, that not all NGOs are invited, and that NGOs are 
not members, as originally planned. 
 
F. Albania's borders remain porous, but with assistance from 
international donors like Post's ICITAP program and the EU's 
PAMECA program, the GOA has made progress in tightening 
 
TIRANA 00000173  006 OF 017 
 
 
border security and increasing interdictions.  The GOA has 
begun to implement its Integrated Border Management (IBM) 
Strategy and Action Plan in an effort to bring Albania's 
border control and surveillance in line with EU 
recommendations and NATO Performance Goals. 
 
Additionally, the GOA continued to implement the Total 
Information Management System (TIMS) project, an ICITAP-led 
initiative to electronically connect and integrate the 
Albanian border (to include the airport, seaports, and land 
border crossings) as well as other structures within the 
Albanian State Police in an effort meet EU recommendations, 
NATO Performance Goals, and other international security 
standards and recommended practices. 
TIMS enables Albanian authorities to monitor immigration and 
emigration patterns and has already assisted in the capture 
of wanted criminals.  The system has been installed in the 
police directorates and commissariats in Tirana, Durres, 
Vlora, Gjirokaster, Mother Tereza Airport (Tirana), and in 
twelve border crossing points around the country.  In 2006, 
with assistance from the U.S. Department of Justice's 
Overseas Prosecutorial Development, Assistance, and Training 
Program (OPDAT), the TIMS system was expanded to the major 
prosecutors' offices and progress is under way incorporating 
into it a prosecutorial case management system. 
 
In addition, ICITAP advisors assist Albanian authorities with 
other border management and security issues. The US 
Government maintains a US Coast Guard Regional Maritime 
Advisor under the Export and Border Security (EXBS) Program 
to assist the GOA in strengthening border and export control 
capabilities in the Adriatic Sea. 
 
Under the EU-funded CARDS (Community Assistance for 
Reconstruction, Development and Stabilization) program, the 
pre-screening of asylum seekers is designed to be 
accomplished at all border crossing points.  IOM, OSCE, and 
UNHCR conducted training on asylum pre-screening procedures 
for all mid- and high-level police officers at border 
crossing points. This project was handed over to the 
MoI/Albanian State Police for implementation. Many of the 
officers who received training under this program have since 
been transferred.  According to the National Coordinator, in 
2006, police forwarded 199 cases of illegal border crossing 
to the prosecutor.  Over the reporting period, the prosecutor 
investigated 254 individuals and the court convicted 162 
individuals. Eighty-one cases are currently in court 
proceedings.  However, other sources report that the actual 
number of illegal migrants is much higher than the data 
identified by police. According to statistics collected from 
Regional State Police Directorates, the Border and Migration 
Police Directorate reported 8893 Albanian citizens and 93 
foreigners were interdicted for illegal border crossing 
during the period January-November 2006. Due to repeat 
offenders, it is likely that the actual number is lower. 
 
G. The National Coordinator has overall responsibility for 
anti-trafficking policy coordination. In addition, a 
working-level committee of representatives from each of the 
agencies on the Inter-Ministerial Committee for the Fight 
Against Human Trafficking meets regularly to review 
implementation of the Action Plan and to exchange information 
(See also 8D and 9B above). 
 
H. The new government endorsed the previous government's 
National Strategy for Combating Human Trafficking and 
National Action Plan (NAP) for 2005-2007. 
 
The NAP requires the mobilization of government and NGO 
resources for the following, inter alia: establishment of a 
witness protection and victim compensation program; creation 
of a National Referral Mechanism (NRM) for the initial 
identification, screening, referral, protection, and 
reintegration of returnees and intercepted trafficking 
victims; conclusion of an agreement with the Greek government 
for the return of child victims of trafficking; establishment 
of a Responsible Authority to oversee the NRM and 
implementation of the Albania-Greek Cooperative Agreement; 
 
TIRANA 00000173  007 OF 017 
 
 
creation of regional committees to coordinate the 
anti-trafficking initiatives in the fields of education, 
social services, and police; sponsorship of safe overseas 
employment, vocational training, and alternative employment 
initiatives; internet monitoring, education, and targeted 
public-awareness initiatives; the institutionalization of 
victims' rights and anti-trafficking awareness training in 
the police, prosecution, and judiciary; and the organization 
of parallel awareness training for the media. 
 
All of the legal and regulatory hurdles for the establishment 
of the NRM, the Responsible Authority, and the Regional 
Committees have been accomplished. Albania has ratified the 
Albania-Greek Cooperative Agreement and Greece is expected to 
do so in 2007. Though structures have been established to 
implement these agreements and have begun to operate, none is 
fully functional. Most lacking is the victim case-tracking 
database that will form the heart of the NRM. 
 
In addition to the NAP, Albania has also approved a Child 
Trafficking Strategy and Action Plan. The Child Trafficking 
Strategy reproduces many of the innovations and approaches of 
the NAP and is based on UNICEF guidelines and the principle 
of assisted voluntary return for child victims.  At the 
institutional level, an inter-agency National Child 
Protection Committee has been created but is not yet fully 
functional. 
 
The draft NAP was distributed among relevant NGOs (e.g. Save 
the Children and Terre des Hommes), government ministries 
(e.g., the ministries of Education, Interior, Labor, Social 
Affairs and Equal Opportunities, Finance, and Justice), and 
the international community (e.g. U.S., EU, OSCE, IOM, 
UNICEF, and others) for comment prior to being finalized. 
Albania also participated in an EU-funded project to 
harmonize anti-trafficking strategies among the SAA candidate 
countries of southeastern Europe, part of which has been the 
preparation of anti-trafficking action plans by the 
International Center for Migration Policy Development 
(ICMPD).  Representatives from the Ministry of Justice and 
the General Prosecutor's Office have participated in regional 
conferences on legal reform and mutual legal assistance in 
the area of anti-trafficking.  Albania is also a member of 
the Southeast European Cooperative Initiative (SECI).  It has 
recently begun to participate in a USAID-funded regional 
project to link national referral mechanisms in the South 
Central Europe region. 
 
The Anti-Trafficking Unit at the MOI has its own website from 
which the National Strategy and Action Plan may be 
downloaded: 
http://www.moi.gov.al/2006/antitrafik/strateg jia antitrfik.pdf 
 
10. (SBU) INVESTIGATION AND PROSECUTION OF TRAFFICKERS: The 
answers below are keyed to reftel, paragraph 29. 
 
A. There are three main articles in the Albanian Penal Code 
that address trafficking in persons: 
 
- Article 110(a) prohibits trafficking in persons for the 
purposes of prostitution, forced labor, organ trafficking, or 
other forms of exploitation; prohibits organizing, managing, 
or financing trafficking in human beings; adds additional 
penalties for committing the offense repeatedly or engaging 
in serious mistreatment or injury to the victim; adds 
additional penalties where the victim dies and where the 
perpetrator is a government official; 
- Article 114 prohibits inducing or gaining from prostitution; 
- Article 114(a) prohibits aggravated exploitation of 
prostitution, such as employing minors, employing multiple 
prostitutes, and using deception, coercion, or accomplices; 
- Article 114(b) contains five paragraphs that directly 
parallel Article 110/a, but apply only to trafficking in 
women; and 
- Article 128(b) contains five paragraphs that directly 
parallel Articles 110/a and 114/b, but apply only to 
trafficking in children. 
 
 
TIRANA 00000173  008 OF 017 
 
 
Articles 297 and 298 of the Criminal Code criminalize illegal 
border crossing for profit and assisting or providing the 
means for illegal border crossing.  Often, traffickers are 
charged with assisting illegal border crossing if there is 
not enough evidence to produce a trafficking charge.  Since 
28 Albanian economic migrants died in a 2004 Ionian Sea 
tragedy, the government increased the penalties for migrant 
smuggling, trafficking, and illegal border crossing, and has 
more clearly defined "trafficking in persons" under Article 
114(b) so that it is in line with the Palermo Protocol of the 
UN Convention on Organized Crime. 
 
In April 2004, GOA enacted legislation providing for the 
establishment of a witness relocation program.  In September 
2004, as part of a sweeping anti-organized crime package, the 
GOA adopted special witness protection provisions, allowing 
for endangered witnesses in trafficking and organized crime 
cases to testify anonymously via remote video link.  That 
same legislative package also provided for broad new civil 
asset forfeiture provisions, which require the accused 
trafficker to demonstrate legitimate sources of wealth. 
 
In 2005, the GOA began to implement these new laws, in terms 
of structures and personnel, funding, and implementing 
regulations.  In conjunction with the passage of the Witness 
Protection Law in early 2004, the GOA created the Organized 
Crime and Witness Protection Directorate at the Ministry of 
Interior (then called the Ministry of Public Order).  That 
Directorate contains the Witness Protection Sector, which has 
responsibility for witness protection issues, including both 
conventional identification protection and the operation of a 
witness relocation program. (See Item 11E below). 
 
In September 2004, GOA adopted powerful new civil asset 
forfeiture provisions.  Among other things, these provisions 
require defendants reasonably suspected of trafficking (or 
other organized crimes) to explain the sources of their own 
wealth and that of their families.  In February 2005, the 
General Prosecutor established a specialized asset forfeiture 
unit in the Serious Crimes Prosecution Office (SCPO). 
Prosecutors have utilized the civil forfeiture provisions, 
but the agency for administration and distribution of seized 
assets is not functional. To date no funds have been 
distributed from this program. 
 
B. The penalty for human trafficking for sexual exploitation 
(Art. 110/a) is 5 to 15 years in prison; for trafficking of 
minors (Art 12b/b) the penalty is 10 to 20 years. 
Aggravating circumstances, such as kidnapping or death, can 
increase the severity of the sentence to a maximum term of 
life in prison.  In 2004, fines were approved for existing 
penalties:  those convicted of exploitation for prostitution 
of a minor are fined 6 to 8 million lek (approx. USD 60,000 
to 80,000); for women, the fine is 3 to 6 million lek 
(approx. USD 30,000 to 60,000).  In addition, the amended 
Criminal Code states that any government official or public 
servant convicted of exploitation for prostitution faces 125 
percent of the standard penalty.  (See also Item 10A above). 
 
C. As for all types of trafficking, Articles 110(a), 114(b), 
and 128(b) of the Albanian criminal code (see 11A above) 
specifically criminalize recruitment of forced labor and 
impose punishments consistent with other forms of trafficking 
(see Item 10B above). 
 
D. Albania's Criminal Code imposes penalties for rape and 
assault depending on the age of the victim: rape of an adult, 
3 to 10 years imprisonment; rape of an adolescent age 14-18, 
5 to 15 years imprisonment; rape of a child under the age of 
14, 7 to 15 years imprisonment.  Generally, these penalties 
are lighter than those for trafficking (see Item 10B above). 
There are also provisions for aggravating circumstances in 
these articles. 
 
E. Prostitution is illegal in Albania, and punishment ranges 
from a fine to a three-year prison sentence.  Brothel owners, 
pimps, and enforcers may also face criminal charges under 
Albanian law.  Most are charged with exploitation of 
 
TIRANA 00000173  009.2 OF 017 
 
 
prostitution and, if convicted, are fined or imprisoned for 
up to five years.  The penalty increases to a 7-10 year 
prison term if there are aggravating circumstances, such as 
kidnapping or assault.  According to statistics provided by 
the National Coordinator, forty-six people were arrested for 
engaging in prostitution in 2006. Although it is also illegal 
to solicit for prostitution, there are no known cases of any 
clients being arrested. 
 
F. In January 2004, GOA established the Serious Crimes Court 
and the Serious Crimes Prosecution Office (SCPO).  The SCPO 
brings together a team of elite prosecutors and police to 
handle the most complex and important TIP and organized crime 
cases.  In October 2004, the Court of Serious Crimes and the 
SCPO were given exclusive jurisdiction over all cases 
involving organized crime or trafficking in narcotics or 
humans.  These specialized institutions have special security 
measures, and count among their members some of the country's 
top judges and prosecutors. 
 
The GOA's Anti-Trafficking NAP requires the tracking of the 
number of arrests, prosecutions, and convictions of 
traffickers of human beings (see Item 10H above).  As noted 
above, the lack of a centralized database for tracking 
alleged traffickers through the criminal justice system 
hinders the government's ability to provide consistent and/or 
reliable statistics.  In 2006, the police referred 51 new 
cases to the General Prosecutor's Office, which investigated 
65 people on charges related to human trafficking. 
Forty-three cases were referred to the Serious Crimes Court, 
which tried 62 cases and convicted 57 people for human 
trafficking related offenses.  According to the National 
Coordinator, the breakdown of prosecutions and convictions 
achieved in 2006 is as follows: 
 
- Under Article 110(a) (organizing, directing, or financing 
trafficking in human beings):  two were prosecuted, 
convicted, and sentenced up to two years in prison. 
 
- Under Article 114 (inducing or gaining from prostitution): 
six were prosecuted and convicted.  One was sentenced up to 
two years in prison, four were sentenced to 2-5 years, and 
one sentenced to 5-10 years. 
 
- Under Article 114(a) (aggravated exploitation of 
prostitution): 40 were prosecuted and 37 convicted. One was 
sentenced for up to two years; six were sentenced to 2-5 
years; 18 were sentenced to 5-10 years; and ten were 
sentenced to more than ten years. 
 
- Under Article 114(b) (trafficking of women for 
prostitution): 14 were prosecuted and 12 convicted.  Seven 
were sentenced to 5-10 years; and five were sentenced to more 
than 10 years. 
 
Under Article 128(b) (trafficking of children for 
exploitation or profit):  six were prosecuted, convicted, and 
sentenced to more than 10 years. 
 
G. Individuals in Albania offering work or false marriages 
are the main instigators behind human trafficking -- mainly 
for sexual exploitation.  However, many of these are 
connected with or later sell their victims to organized crime 
networks outside the country, whose operations are 
sophisticated, with networks extending into Western Europe. 
Organized criminal gangs often launder their ill-gotten gains 
by channeling them into construction projects, restaurants, 
hotels, travel agencies, gas stations, and some retail 
stores. Though in 2006 there was only one case in which a 
police official was arrested for assisting an arrested 
trafficker go free, it is believed that this phenomenon and 
general corruption of police and other security forces is 
more widespread (see Item 10M below for further information 
on specific cases of police complicity). 
 
H. The Anti-Trafficking Sector of the ASP investigates all 
types of trafficking cases but its resources are limited, 
even with the assistance of international donors such as 
 
TIRANA 00000173  010 OF 017 
 
 
Post's ICITAP program.  The Serious Crimes Prosecution Office 
(SCPO) has jurisdiction over all trafficking cases and 
investigates and prosecutes cases forwarded to it by police. 
Albania's Law on Interception states that police can use 
electronic surveillance in their investigations with the 
approval of a prosecutor.  The GOA possesses the necessary 
technological equipment required for such investigations and 
conducts them on a regular basis.  Under the law, 
investigators may also engage in undercover operations and 
offer mitigated punishment or immunity in exchange for 
cooperation. 
 
I. MOI does not have resources to conduct its own specialized 
training, but it does willingly participate in specific 
training to combat trafficking and organized crime offered by 
NGOs and the international donor community. The MOI has not 
completed the development of a specialized training course 
for identifying potential or actual victims of trafficking, 
though a course curriculum and some lesson plans have been 
developed. The curriculum and lesson plans have been used to 
train anti-trafficking and border police at both Rinas 
Airport and the Kapshtice border crossing. According to MOI 
records, approximately 80 percent of all anti-trafficking and 
border police have received training from international 
experts since 2001.  However, as reported for 2005, 
specialized training has been challenging within the past 
year because of turnover and reassignments within MOI as part 
of restructuring in the ASP.  Post's OPDAT program is 
training prosecutors and judicial police officers in 
techniques to combat trafficking, and USAID's Legal Rights 
Initiative continues training students of the Magistrates 
school and sitting judges on issues of trafficking, gender 
sensitivities and awareness, and family law.  The NAP 
envisages anti-trafficking awareness training for all new 
entrants to the police service and specialized training for 
officers working in anti-trafficking as well as parallel 
training for judges and prosecutors.  Three regional 
anti-trafficking seminars for police, prosecutors, and judges 
were organized by the National Coordinator with UNODC funding 
in 2006. 
 
J. The GOA cooperates closely with other governments in the 
investigation and prosecution of trafficking cases. In the 
past year, Albania has jointly investigated a total of nine 
cases with international partners.  With Italy, the GOA has 
exchanged information in four cases. Albania has also 
conducted joint operations with Italian Interforza and the 
Albanian Border Police accompany the Italian Guardia di 
Finanza on coastal patrols.  The GOA has cooperated in two 
cases with Kosovo and one case each with Greece, Spain and 
Norway. Information is also exchanged regularly with 
Macedonia and other regional countries through SECI.  In 
addition, Albania is a member of Interpol and has formal or 
informal mutual legal assistance agreements with most 
neighboring and EU countries.  Though Albania cooperates 
fully with U.S. judicial and/or investigatory requests, the 
GOA has expressed a desire to formalize a mutual assistance 
agreement with the U.S. 
 
K. Albania has bilateral extradition treaties with Macedonia, 
Romania, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Slovenia, Croatia, Turkey, 
and the U.S.  For each of these countries, Albania honors the 
agreement and extradites its own citizens. The only exception 
is in cases in which the extradited individual may face the 
death penalty, which is forbidden under the Albanian 
Constitution. Albania is party to the European Convention on 
Extradition.  As a general practice, the GOA does not 
extradite Albanian citizens to other countries to face 
charges under the Convention, but instead will prosecute them 
in Albania. 
 
The extradition treaty with the U.S. was signed in 1933 with 
the former Kingdom of Albania. There remains some question as 
to whether the Albanian courts will continue to recognize the 
treaty, although a partial panel of the Albanian High Court 
(not the ultimate constitutional court) upheld the treaty in 
December 2004.  The Office of the Prosecutor General 
indicated that they would like to update the 1933 treaty. 
 
TIRANA 00000173  011 OF 017 
 
 
 
In the first ten months of 2006, Albania received 122 
requests for extradition (double the 2005 number) and of 
these 42 have been approved so far.  Over the same period, 
Albania received 411 letters rogatory and has executed 127 of 
them. 
 
L. Individual Albanian police officers have been complicit 
indirectly in trafficking crimes, but trafficking in persons 
is not tolerated at an institutional level.  As reported 
above, the OIC is responsible for investigating allegations 
of all types of police corruption and misconduct (see Item 8C 
above and 10M below). 
 
M.  According to statistics provided by the National 
Coordinator, in 2006 the OIC investigated five cases of 
assistance to illegal border crossing by police officers. 
Four of them were arrested in the act and expelled from the 
State Police.  Eleven other cases were sent to the 
Prosecutor's Office for further investigation. In cooperation 
with State Intelligence Service (SHISH), the OIC also 
investigated and arrested the chief of police in Devoll for 
his role in producing counterfeit travel documents. Four 
other border police officers were arrested for corruption 
and/or abuse of power. Also in 2006, the Chief of Police in 
Tepelena, and three subordinates were arrested for issuing 
false passports and for knowingly issuing passports to wanted 
persons. 
 
The OIC operates a toll-free phone helpline for the public to 
denounce alleged police misconduct. In the last year the OIC 
has received 90 complaints from the public concerning 
allegations of corruption involving 94 police officers. These 
calls resulted in two cases involving police corruption being 
forwarded to the prosecutor's office for further 
investigation. 
 
In July a returned victim of trafficking was murdered by her 
pimp in Burrel, despite having pleaded with the police for 
protection. A case was brought against the deputy chief of 
police and an investigator for abuse of office and their 
deliberate failure to take action. After further 
investigation, however, the District Prosecution Office 
dropped the criminal charges against both officers. As part 
of the administrative reform of the ASP, the deputy chief of 
police was terminated; the investigation has been allowed to 
continue his employment. 
 
Finally, in Korca the head of Anti-trafficking Unit at the 
Korca regional police and an investigator were arrested 
following an undercover sting operation in which they were 
caught accepting a bride to help secure the release of an 
arrested trafficker. Both are currently in custody awaiting 
trail. 
 
N. Albania is not considered a destination for child sex 
tourism, though in 2006 there was one case in which the 
British operator of an orphanage was arrested on charges of 
child molestation.  According to media reports, he also made 
the children available to foreign pedophiles that came to 
Albania specifically for this purpose. In addition, there 
have also been media reports of children trafficked to Greece 
for sexual exploitation. 
 
Article 7 and 8 of the Albanian Criminal Code specify the 
criminal offenses that have extraterritorial coverage and 
this does not specifically include child abuse. However, the 
Code does provide general applicability to Albanian citizens 
who commit an offense within the territory of another 
country, when that offense is also punishable in that 
country. No Albanians have prosecuted or convicted for child 
sex abuse outside of Albania. 
 
O. In August 2001, Albania ratified ILO Convention 182 
Concerning the Prohibition and Immediate Action for the 
Elimination of the Worst Forms of Child Labor.  ILO 
Convention 29 and 105 on forced or compulsory labor were 
signed and ratified in 1957 and 1997, respectively.  The 
 
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Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in 
Persons, especially Women and Children, supplementing the UN 
Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime, was signed 
by Albania in 2000 and ratified in 2002.  Albania has agreed 
in principle, but has not yet signed or ratified the Optional 
Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) 
on the Sale of Children, Child Prostitution, and Child 
Pornography. In November, Albania ratified the Council of 
Europe Convention on Measures Against Trafficking of Human 
Beings. 
 
11. (SBU) PROTECTION AND ASSISTANCE TO VICTIMS: Answers below 
keyed to reftel, paragraph 30: 
 
A. It is often difficult for victims of trafficking to return 
to their families and former lives because of stigmatization 
by their families and society in general.  The GOA's National 
Victim Referral Center (NVRC) provides assistance to Albanian 
and third-country national trafficking victims (women and 
children) as well as illegal migrants (see item 8B above). 
With a capacity of 100 beds, the NVRC is under-utilized.  In 
2006, a total of 46 returnee victims of trafficking were 
housed there (38 were Albanian, 15 were children, and 8 
third-country victims). In addition, an unspecified number of 
illegal immigrants were also housed there. 
 
In addition to the NVRC, there are three primary NGO-run 
shelters that work directly with victims of trafficking to 
assist them with reintegration and several other NGOs that 
are implementing prevention and awareness activities to 
counter trafficking in their communities. The three primary 
NGO-run shelters are Different and Equal (D&E), Tjeter 
Vizion, and the Vatra Psycho-Social Center (Vatra). The Vatra 
Center in Vlora assisted 208 (123 new cases) trafficking 
victims in 2006, D&E assisted 60 (27 new cases), and Tjeter 
Vizion assisted 30 (all new cases). 
 
Currently there is no legal provision for granting temporary 
or permanent residency to third-country victims of 
trafficking. According to National Coordinator, the GOA has 
drafted legislation as part of its new &Law on Foreigners8 
that would address this issue. The GOA has in place 
legislation and procedures of handling asylum seekers and, in 
principle, victims of trafficking could apply for asylum. In 
the past year Albania granted asylum to six individuals. 
 
Both the NVRC and D&E reintegration center offer HIV/AIDS 
testing on a voluntary basis.  There are no facilities 
specializing in health care for trafficking victims in 
Albania, though the NVRC, the Vatra Center, and D&E provide 
some medical and psychological treatment on site. 
International organizations like the OSCE and the domestic 
NGO "Citizen Advocacy Office" provide some legal services. 
 
B. Despite government approval to contract NGOs to provide 
services, the government's resources are limited, so iQl\3through the USAID-funded CAAHT 
project (see also Item 9E above).  CAAHT continued to 
implement a grant program to support local and international 
NGOs' ability to protect and reintegrate victims of 
trafficking.  This program also seeks to assist civil society 
in developing capacity for prevention efforts and 
coordination of anti-trafficking activities throughout the 
country. For 2006, the grant program had a budget of $700,000. 
 
C. In May the GOA established the Responsible Authority for 
protection and assistance to victims of trafficking, charged 
with overseeing the National Referral Mechanism (NRM) and 
implementing the Albanian-Greek Cooperative Agreement. In 
November 2006, the General Director of the ASP issued a 
Service Order amending existing procedures for processing 
Albanian and foreign citizens returned from other countries. 
Among other things, the order allows for the participation of 
 
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anti-trafficking and Border Police representatives, as well 
as authorized social workers. This order requires training 
and the development of local procedures for each border 
crossing point. To date, such procedures have been developed 
and implemented only at Rinas Airport and the Kapshtice 
border crossing point. Local procedures have yet to be 
established at the remaining 14 reception facilities. 
Trafficking victims may be held up to ten hours in police 
directorates while undergoing screening. After a deposition 
is taken, suspected victims are transported to either NGO-run 
shelters or the State-run NVRC (see item 10E above) for 
reintegration services. Most foreign victims are sent to the 
NVRC. 
 
Though the NRM is not fully functional and, most 
significantly, still lacks a centralized case-tracking 
database, the structure and procedures are now formally in 
place. This represents a significant achievement and a major 
step forward in the fight against human trafficking in 
Albania. 
 
According to the National Coordinator, in 2006, the police 
firmly identified 27 returnee victims of trafficking and 
another 141 cases of suspected trafficking; all 168 were 
referred to shelters. This is an increase from 64 in 2005, 
though still down from 260 in 2004.  Both the NVRC in Tirana 
and the Vatra Psycho-Social Center in Vlora provide shelter 
and medical services for trafficking victims.   According to 
data issued by the Vatra Center in 2006, the shelter 
accommodated 208 Albanian girls, women, and children. Of 
those, 123 were new victims of trafficking, a decrease of 
nearly 20% compared to 2004. Fifty-six of the cases referred 
to Vatra had been trafficked at least once previously. 
Seventy-nine had been repatriated from EU countries, mostly 
Greece and Italy, and were referred mostly by police, but 
also by NGOs and families. 
 
According to the Different & Equal shelter (the former IOM 
shelter) report on its reintegration program for Albanian 
trafficking victims, 27 new cases of Albanian victims of 
trafficking and 33 cases referred in 2006 had been trafficked 
at least once previously, all women and girls.  Most of them 
were unable or unwilling to return to their former homes and 
received shelter, protection, and medical, social, legal, and 
other services.  The Tjeter Vizion shelter accommodated 30 
new cases of Albanian victims of trafficking in 2006. 
 
In the last half of 2006, all of the private NGO-run shelters 
have complained that the police directorate in the southern 
city of Gjirokaster, that covers one of the major 
border-crossing points with Greece, has not fully cooperated 
in referring victims and/or potential victims to them. 
 
D. In principle, all police officers who work in 
anti-trafficking units throughout Albania have received 
training from a variety of NGOs and international donors.  As 
a result, they increasingly recognize that trafficked women 
and children are victims, not criminals, and treat them as 
such.  NGOs report that, overall, anti-trafficking police are 
better trained, conduct appropriate screening, and refer 
victims to local shelters.  One area of concern, however, is 
that despite the amount of police training on the issue of 
trafficking and victim identification in Albania, over the 
past year many police who had been trained were either 
terminated as part of the ASP restructuring process or were 
transferred to other duties and were replaced with new and 
untrained officers.  This high turnover in the police force 
over the past year limits the value and usefulness of the 
training's practical implementation. 
 
E. Victims are encouraged to testify against traffickers, but 
often refuse to testify or change their testimony as a result 
of intimidation by traffickers.  According to statistics 
provided by the National Coordinator, in 2006, only 20 out of 
227 suspected or identified victims of trafficking formally 
denounced their traffickers. In 2005, GOA began to use the 
new witness protection law passed in 2004 (see Item 9B 
above). OPDAT is donating videoconferencing equipment to the 
 
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Serious Crimes Court, the court with jurisdiction over 
trafficking cases, so that witnesses may testify remotely and 
have their identities protected.  SECI is donating 
complementary equipment to the ASP and the General 
Prosecutor's office. This equipment should be installed in 
all three institutions in 2007. In 2006, no victims of 
trafficking benefited from witness protection programs.  The 
2007 GOA budget for witness protection is $450,000, up from 
$200,000 in 2006. 
 
Albanian law allows for civil lawsuits; however victims 
generally do not initiate lawsuits due to distrust of the 
police and the judiciary as well as the length of time 
required to complete the civil procedure.  Under Albanian 
law, court testimony is given 48 hours to ten days after the 
arrest, after which foreign witnesses are free to be 
repatriated.  Victims are not prohibited from seeking other 
employment or leaving the country. (See item 11A for 
information regarding Albania's asset seizure law). 
 
F. The National Victim Referral Center (NVRC) -- operated by 
the Ministry of Labor, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities 
(MOLSAEO) and rehabilitated in part by USAID funding -- 
provides assistance to Albanian trafficking victims, illegal 
migrants, and children, in addition to third-country national 
trafficking victims.  The NVRC offers the following services, 
in addition to basic sustenance: vocational/employment 
training, psycho-social assistance, medical assistance, legal 
assistance, rehabilitation training, and family 
reunification. Despite the name, the NVRC serves more as a 
shelter protecting Albanian women and children victims and 
foreign victims and illegal migrants for short periods of 
time (typically one to three months) involved in court 
proceedings and in need of police protection, rather than a 
reintegration center, with other victims being referred to 
the shelters elsewhere (D&E, Tjeter Vizion, and Vatra). 
There is no juvenile justice system in Albania.  Child 
victims are placed in the same shelters as adults, but in 
separate quarters. 
 
G. The GOA does not provide any specialized training for 
government officials in assisting victims of trafficking, 
though mandatory training for police and customs officials is 
included in the National Action Plan.  Police and prosecutors 
received training from a variety of international donors 
during the reporting period (see Item 9G above).  Specialized 
training for Albania's diplomatic and consular staff in 
recognizing and assisting potential Albanian trafficking 
victims abroad is also part of the NAP, but has yet to be 
implemented.  More training for police and prosecutors 
assigned to TIP cases is needed in order to help them better 
understand new witness protection legislation, the specific 
nature of trafficking offenses, the pertinent provisions of 
the Albanian Penal Code, new "special investigative means" 
available in anti-trafficking investigations, and the 
particular protection needs of trafficking victims.  Over the 
reporting period, CAAHT grantees and partners continued to 
work with local stakeholders in anti-trafficking activities, 
which included roundtables, working groups, and awareness 
sessions.  Also, the Transnational Action against Child 
Trafficking (TACT) project, co-funded by USAID and 
implemented by Terre des hommes (Tdh) and Arsis (a Greek 
NGO), targeted state social services in their prevention and 
protection activities.  The project included training on 
child protection and working with vulnerable communities. 
 
H. See item 12F above. 
 
I. Thirteen NGOs and international organizations cooperate in 
the Together Against Child Trafficking (initials BKTF in 
Albanian) Coalition and focus specifically on child 
trafficking and child victim protection issues.  The 
coalition is a key partner of the GOA in addressing the 
issues of child protection and child trafficking and the BKTF 
strongly influenced the development of Albania's Child 
Anti-Trafficking Strategy, adopted in 2005. 
 
The TACT program also delivers trafficking awareness raising 
 
TIRANA 00000173  015 OF 017 
 
 
programs and provides protection services for returned 
victims and those at risk.  Both TdH and Arsis are members of 
the BKTF. The TACT project is currently in its third phase 
and is shifting its focus from direct support of victims to 
enabling local structures (such as the Child Protection 
Units, as described above) to provide more sustainable forms 
of support. 
 
Under the framework of protecting returned victims and those 
at risk, 1,542 children have benefited from protection 
services under the TACT project.   In 2006, TACT has led to 
the identification of 93 new cases of child victims of 
trafficking in Albania and 112 new cases of Albanian child 
victims of trafficking in Greece.  Since its inception, the 
project has helped 684 children reintegrate into schools and 
society. 
 
In partnership with local municipalities, the TACT project 
has also led to the creation of five Child Protection Units 
(CPU) around the country. The CPUs both identify and provide 
social services to at-risk and returned victims. For the 
latter, it assists children in the process of reintegration. 
TACT is building capacity within the CPUs to allow them to 
take over the TACT files once the project close. These local 
focal points will also provide awareness campaign information 
to students and serve as referral points in identifying 
children at risk (for example, school drop-outs) and those in 
need of assistance by local social workers.  Ongoing areas to 
be addressed by prevention efforts include: children at risk 
following their departure from state orphanage institutions 
or return from having been trafficked or forced to work 
abroad, birth registration of children and families with 
state authorities, and school reintegration of children, 
especially those from vulnerable and marginalized communities. 
 
Another member of the BKTF, Save the Children, cooperated 
with other local organizations to develop 
school-reintegration programs for children who were 
trafficked and offer life-skills training.  The specific 
objective of the partnership project between Save the 
Children and Children of the World and Albania, a local NGO, 
was to reduce the vulnerability of children at risk of 
trafficking by supporting formal and non-formal education. 
 
The CAAHT project, which has been renewed for an additional 
three years to run through 2009, supports the efforts of 
local and international NGOs to address trafficking in women 
and children. CAAHT has a particular focus on prevention and 
reintegration through the strengthening of civil society, 
NGO, and GOA capacity in these areas. 
 
CAAHT consists of a small grants project, which in the first 
phase of the project (2003 ) 2006) supported 23 local and 
international NGOS working in prevention and reintegration. 
In 2006, 27,141 women and children have participated in 
prevention programs conducted by civil society through the 
CAAHT program.  Prevention activities vary from 
house-to-house awareness campaigns to anti-trafficking themed 
radio soap opera programs to the training of journalists on 
ethical reporting, birth registration and legal protection of 
at-risk youth, and the development of a Tirana University 
curriculum on anti-trafficking for social workers.  In the 
same year, CAAHT-sponsored assistance and reintegration 
programs supported 191 victims of trafficking.  CAAHT has 
recently announced the fourth grant round to support local 
and international NGOs in 2007. 
 
In addition to the small grants component, CAAHT has also 
established regional cluster groups (RCGs) which met 18 times 
in key cities throughout the north, east, south, and central 
parts of the country, bringing together multiple stakeholders 
involved in the fight against trafficking to increase 
coordination and prevention efforts in this field this past 
year.  At the request of RCG members, CAAHT-initiated working 
groups are moving to local levels to give more voice to local 
actors and government representatives to implement change 
directly in their own communities.  This momentum resulted in 
an Administrative Order issued by the Prime Minister in June 
 
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2006 to create 12 Prefect-led Regional Committees in the 
Fight Against Trafficking in Human Beings.  (See also 9E 
above). 
 
As noted above, for victims of trafficking, there are three 
primary NGO-run shelters that work directly with victims of 
trafficking to assist them with reintegration and several 
other NGOs that are implementing prevention and awareness 
activities to counter trafficking in their communities. The 
primary NGO-run shelters are Different and Equal (D&E), 
Tjeter Vizion, and the Vatra Psycho-Social Center (Vatra). In 
addition there is the State-run National Victim Referral 
Center (NVRC), which is also operated with support from 
private NGOs (See Item 11A above). 
 
D&E was awarded a grant through the USAID-funded CAAHT 
project, with additional funding from the Dutch Embassy, to 
assist in the protection and reintegration of repatriated 
trafficked women and girls in Tirana.  In addition to 
providing shelter, the center provides reintegration 
assistance, medical care, educational opportunities, job 
training, and job placement services for victims.  Another 
CAAHT grantee, Tjeter Vizion also runs a project which has 
two main foci: one on the social rehabilitation and 
integration of minors who have been trafficked and another on 
the reduction of trafficking through the provision of social 
services to at-risk and vulnerable groups.  It builds on the 
organization's successful work with school dropouts using 
non-formal basic education.  Tjeter Vizion,s services 
include two shelters (one for children and another for women) 
and secure apartments in the district of Elbasan. In the last 
year, 30 victims of trafficking received assistance and 
reintegration services from Tjeter Vizion. 
 
NOMINATION OF HEROES AND BEST PRACTICES 
--------------------------------------- 
 
13. (SBU) TIP HEROES. Post nominates Albania's National 
Anti-Trafficking Coordinator and Deputy Minister of the 
Interior Iva Zajmi and former head of the returnee process 
within the border and migration police, Zija Hasaj, as TIP 
heroes for 2006. Both have made exceptional contributions in 
helping Albania meet the minimum TIP standards. Both nominees 
are currently undergoing vetting for human rights and other 
possible ineligibilities. 
 
Since assuming the anti-trafficking portfolio in 2005, Zajmi 
has reinvigorated the country's efforts and has made 
excellent strides in implementing the provision of the NAP. 
Her major accomplishments include the creation of the 
National Referral Mechanism, the conclusion of the 
Albanian-Greek Cooperative Agreement, the establishment of 
the Responsible Authority, and a toll-free helpline. Zajmi 
has also been the force behind the creation of Regional 
Anti-Trafficking Committees that are designed to move the 
fight against trafficking out of the capital and into the 
rural areas where it frequently begins. 
 
After being assigned to reopen the Rinas Airport interview 
and reception center, Zija Hasaj, at his own initiative, 
coordinated with the local Chief of Commissariat, as well as 
with representatives of Anti-Trafficking structures within 
the ASP, to develop handling and interview training material 
QQ"T>Qfor returned persons.  He ensured development of local border 
crossing point implementing procedures and related follow-up 
requirements in a effort to start the National Referral 
Mechanism. Hasaj accomplished this in an environment that was 
highly resistant to change.  Commissar Hasaj had over twenty 
years of service in the ASP and was wounded in the line of 
duty. Regrettably, Commissar Hasaj was forced to resign from 
the ASP due to the reduction of ASP ranks. Nonetheless, his 
efforts were a prime example of a mid-level official who 
understood the problem of trafficking and went beyond the 
minimum to enact change -- rare qualities, especially in this 
environment. Hasaj showed exceptional integrity in his 
anti-trafficking position. He currently resides with his 
family in Tirana. 
 
 
TIRANA 00000173  017 OF 017 
 
 
14. (SBU) BEST PRACTICES. Post would like to recommend two 
initiatives launched over the past year that seek to move the 
focus of anti-trafficking efforts out of the capital and into 
the rural areas.  The first is the creation of Regional 
Anti-Trafficking Committees in each of Albania's 12 
prefectures.  Under the leadership of the Prefect, who 
represents the central government, committees have been 
formed that bring together local police, education, and 
social service officials to coordinate local anti-trafficking 
efforts. Local NGOs also participate as observers.  The 
second is the creation of Child Protection Units in five 
municipalities around the country. This represents a 
significant development because for the first time there will 
be a sustainable organizational structure outside the capital 
that serves to deliver social services specifically to both 
at-risk and identified victims of child trafficking. 
RIES